Definition
A pattern of recurring activity within a special use airspace (SUA) — such as a Military Operations Area, Restricted Area, or Warning Area — established by reviewing how often, at what times, and at what altitudes the airspace has actually been used in the past. Air traffic controllers and pilots use this historical record to judge whether the airspace is likely to be active or available for transit when current status information is not available.
Plain English
It is the track record of how a piece of special airspace has been used over time. Looking at past activity helps controllers and pilots predict whether it is likely to be busy or quiet right now.
Context Anchor
Seen during preflight route planning when a pilot is deciding whether a route through or near special use airspace is practical.
Derivation
Historical comes from a Greek word meaning inquiry or recorded knowledge. In this term, it points to a record of what has happened before, not what is happening right now.
Why Pilots Care
Determines whether a pilot may legally cross certain restricted zones without additional clearance or denial.
Grounding Statement
Past activity can guide planning, but current airspace status is what matters before entering the area.
Intuition Check
Do not read historical use as current permission or current status. It means past pattern only; the pilot still needs present-time information before entering the airspace.
Example Sentence 1
Based on the historical use of the special use airspace along the route, the controller expected the MOA to be cold on a Sunday morning and cleared the flight directly through it.
Example Sentence 2
Historical use of special use airspace allowed the flight school to continue operations through the restricted area.